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I remember the first time
I realized I lost you,
It was the morning I sat
Paralyzed in shock
On the cement back steps
And lost in a fog of confusion
I wondered,
How could something
So beautifully perfect
Break as easy as glass?
I supposed the most
Beautiful things were
Always the most fragile

I remember the second time
I realized I lost you
It was the hot midday
I called you from my car
I heard you paralyze in shock
As I yelled words
That cleared the fog and
I wondered,
How did this glass
Not shatter sooner
For it is the most fragile
Of love I’ve ever known

The third time I lost you
It was a painfully clear night
Those pieces of glass became
Speckles of sparkling dust
Dried and fresh blood
Still staining my hands
I guess it took three times
To wash my hands clean
And to pull the last shreds
Of our love from my skin

There’s not a day that passes
That I don’t think of you,
They tell me this is love
You told me you’d always
be there if I came back,
Anyone would say this is love
Hand out our book to anyone,
Let them read the words you spoke and
The details of your decisions and
I promise,
No one would title our book Love
I stare at you
Like I stare at the sun
Every morning
at six forty five
Your words are the first beams
That stretch across the cold sky
Reminding me this is a new start
You told me you loved me
And you looked exactly like the sunrise
That my darkness has been
waiting for
I was always so proud when I could catch the frogs myself. It was difficult because they didn’t often stay in one place long enough to be caught. By the time that I triumphantly held the frog and labeled and called it mine, I was already comfortable in my mindset of possession. I would build a beautiful home with sticks and leaves and walls, and a lid to prevent an escape. What more could any creature want than to be loved and taken care of? To be given a home and to belong to another?  
As a child I remember being told, “you can’t keep a living thing. It has a whole life out there you’re keeping it from,” and the waterworks of tears that followed. “They have everything they need,” I would protest, “It is mine.”
It would take some convincing to finally convince me to let go. With tears falling down my cheeks I would lift the frog out of the home I had made and leave it in a place very different from where I had found it. Nana would explain how the home I made was beautiful, but that it could not be permanent. Living things are meant to be free, not owned. Meant to be loved, not possessed.
I realize now that people are no different. We love to label and possess each other, to create homes we expect to be permanent. I am learning to remember that I can hold another’s heart and know it is not mine. To be happy in a phase of life and know that it is temporary. And when the time comes, some people I love I will have to let go.
He is not iced tea
He will not leave you cold
He is not bitter coffee
He will not burn your lips
He is lukewarm
The kind of apple cider
You drive far to find
And then drink all at once
Both everything
I ever wanted and
Everything I despised
Both rough and angry
Sandpaper man and
Warm and soft
Belly full of beer
But you
With a predisposition
A false thought of
What it meant to be a man
This was both
The personality I craved and
frustrated me to the core
Yet still what I look for
Is not what I hope to find
Everything about you that
Turns me on
Makes me remember
You are not a real man
And still you are
everything I despise
Sometimes
All I want
To rip from you
Both the clothes
And the parts of you
That I never wanted to see
To wake you
From your high
Shake your shoulders
Trace every part of you
In hope it will awaken
The yearning to be more
More than both everything
I ever wanted and
Everything I despise
Your compassion was a reminder,
As I fought the waves of my own revival
Still it wasn’t you I needed,
I’ve always held the key to my own survival
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